Pubdate: Sun, 03 Feb 2002 Source: Times-Reporter (OH) Copyright: 2002 The Times-Reporter Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1701 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1188 Author: Benjamin Duer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) EFFECTS OF DRUG USE CAN BE DEADLY From impaired vision and short-term memory loss to infertility and lung cancer, the addiction to and effects of marijuana can be overwhelming. And it becomes lethal when laced with more powerful narcotics, such as cocaine and heroin, said Dale Hilton, a recovery care provider with the Tuscarawas County Alcohol & Addiction Program. "It depends on what you're lacing it with (because) you don't know what the potency rate is," he said. "So you might be smoking some pot and it's laced with PCP and you're not expecting to go off on this trip. "Next thing you know you can't feel, you can't see and people go into shock." Hilton said amphetamines, opium, formaldehyde and even embalming fluid also are substances used by people to lace a marijuana joint. With embalming fluid, a substance closely associated with phencyclidine (PCP), a person's body can go numb. He told a story about one of his clients who smoked a marijuana cigarette soaked in embalming fluid. He said the client lost feeling in both legs while driving a car. The client pulled into his driveway and crashed the car into his house because he couldn't feel his legs while applying the brakes. "It's real bad," Hilton said. "(But) I haven't heard any of it (happening) in our area." But he said it's not very often he has clients who smoke marijuana exclusively. Often his clients, who are generally court-ordered to seek drug evaluation and treatment, also use other illicit drugs. The primary reason people become addicted to marijuana can be found in a chemical called tetrahydrocannabinol (TCH), which mostly affects the brain and can cause cancerous tumors. "TCH levels are so much higher in marijuana today," said Pat Kelly, a prevention recovery specialist with the county's alcohol and addiction program. During the 1960s and '70s, she said the TCH level in marijuana was typically between 3 and 5 percent. Now, it's climbed to between 10 and 20 percent. Marijuana doesn't just attack brain cells, but it also can do severe damage to a person's lungs. Hilton said one marijuana joint contains between seven to 20 times as much tar as one cigarette does. "... And if you smoke a cigarette you inhale and exhale," he said. "Well with a joint you hold it, you want the smoke to get in, so it burns your trachea tubes (and) gets into your lungs." Not only is marijuana smoked but also it can be eaten in cookies, brownies and other baked goods. Lung cancer, bronchitis, asthma, brain damage, heart damage, lower sperm counts, infertility and a coma are all examples of what prolonged marijuana use can do to a person's body. As for short-term affects, marijuana can impair vision and decision- making skills, increase heart rate, change sex drive, lower blood pressure, slow down reaction time, distort perception of reality and cause a person to suffer short-term memory loss. Hilton said most people don't realize that marijuana is classified as a hallucinogen, like lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), which means a person's time and reality can be distorted when it is used. Although she didn't have the figures to prove it, Kelly said she sees many more adults - between the ages of 18 and early 40s - using marijuana now than teen-agers. That doesn't mean teen-agers don't use it, but she said alcohol and cigarettes have become more popular options for most teens nowadays. Both counselors agreed marijuana is a huge problem in Tuscarawas County and the primary reasons are it's cheap and readily available. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth